31 Pa. Super. 647 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1906
Opinion by
The courts of last resort in many states of the Union have clearly held that the payee or other lawful holder of a check,
Were we at liberty to regard this as an open question, we would find great difficulty in rejecting the force of the reasoning
Moreover, the contract of a banlc with its depositor is a simple one. It undertakes to safely keep his money and pay it out only upon his demand made in the manner and form sanctioned by the long-established .usage of the commercial world. And the payment must be, at the peril of the bank, in exact accord with the tenor of the demand. When, therefore, a bank hands over its counters the money called for by a check to which the name of the drawer or payee has been forged, it pays out its own money and not its depositor’s, because the sole condition upon which it could disburse the latter does not exist. It has attempted to pay its debt to its depositor, but the attempt has been rendered ineffectual by its own negligence or mistake, and the consequences of such error must be borne by itself; they cannot be visited upon either the depositor or payee who were in no wise responsible for it.
Convincing as this line of reasoning would seem to be when fully developed and strongly stated, as it has been by the Supreme Court of the United States in First National Bank v. Whitman, 94 U. S. 348, yet, for the purpose of determining whether or not the acts of the appellant bank amounted to an acceptance of the check, we must regard it as conclusively answered by the case of Seventh National Bank v. Cook, 73 Pa. 483. In that case, upon a state of facts precisely similar to the one now before us, our Supreme Court has declared the act of a bank, dn mistakenly paying out money on a check on which the name of the payee was indorsed, by another without authority, amounted to an acceptance of the check.
We think we may properly say, without being accused of any want of respect for the authority of the high tribunal uttering that judgment, that the opinion delivered does not disclose any satisfactory reason for the conclusion reached. The judgment seems to be rested on a single sentence taken from the opinion of Mr. Justice Davis in Bank of the Republic v. Millard, 77 U. S. 152. In that case it was distinctly held that the payee in a check, which the bank had mistakenly undertaken to pay on an unauthorized indorsement, could not maintain an action against the bank, and the judgment he had recovered in the court below was reversed. This was the only point decided. No question arose as to the result that would follow had the bank, later on, balanced the book of its depositor, taken credit therein for the money so paid out, and returned the check as paid and canceled to the drawer. No such facts were presented by that record. It is true the eminent jurist who delivered the opinion in that case uttered a carefully guarded suggestion as to the result that might flow from such facts, had they been established. This, we think, cannot be regarded as more than dictum merely, especially in the light of the later case of First National Bank v. Whitman, supra. In that case the exact point was raised and decided and it was again held, following Bank v. Millard to that extent, that a payee in a check could not maintain an action against the bank because the latter had paid out the money called for by the check on an unauthorized indorsement of the name of the payee. But the case goes much farther. The record presented the exact state of facts contemplated in the suggestion of Mr. Justice Davis quoted, and apparently relied on in Bank v. Cook, supra; but the court clearly held that neither the payment of the money by the bank, under such circumstances, nor the subsequent entry of the cheek in the depositor’s book and its return to him as a canceled check, amounted to an acceptance of the check by the- bank, nor did such acts disclose any intention to accept. On the contrary, the entire conduct of the bank evidenced an intent to do a very different thing, viz., to pay the check. The bank paid out its money on the mistaken assumption that it had before it a proper demand of its
It is clear, therefore, that the case of Seventh Nat. Bank v. Cook finds no support in the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States in like cases. Nor has its doctrine ever received the deliberate sanction and approval of our own Supreme Court in any later case. It is true it was cited with apparent approval in Saylor v. Bushong, 100 Pa. 23, but the decision in the latter case in no wise depended on it. There the payee of a check had neglected to present it for payment for a long period of time after its receipt. During the interval the bank suspended payment. By his own negligence the payee had thus lost his right to any action against the drawer for the recovery of the debt, to satisfy which the check was given. In a subsequent settlement between the bank and its depositor, in which the latter actively participated, he expressly directed that the amount of the check should be deducted from his balance and held by the bank to await the action of the payee. Upon that state of facts the judgment in Saylor v. Bushong can be abundantly sustained on both reason and authority and the same conclusion ought to have been, doubtless would have been, reached had the case of Seventh Nat. Bank v. Cook never been decided.
Although it thus seems to stand unsupported and alone, it must still stand for us as declaratory of the law of Pennsylvania. We can neither reverse nor ignore it. We must follow it as far as it actually goes, but we are unwilling to stretch
It is ingeniously argued, however, by the learned counsel for the appellee that “ the case at bar is not an attempt to charge a person as an acceptor pro forma, but is brought on the theory that the bank, having charged the amount of the check to the drawer’s account and settled with him, using the check as a voucher, holds the amount of the check for the true owner thereof.” This argument plainly rests on the assumption that the bank, after having negligently paid out the money called for by the check, without thé indorsement of the payee, could deplete its depositor’s account by attempting to charge it to him, or could use the check as a voucher against him on a settlement after he acquired knowledge of the facts and demanded his entire balance. Such an attempt, on the part of the bank, would be wholly futile. The bank had no more right to
As we view the case, then, the inability of the plaintiffs to establish the material averment in their'statement of claim, that the bank “ did then and there accept said check,” is a flat bar to their right to recover in this action, and further litigation between the parties would be unavailing. The thirteenth assignment of error is sustained and this renders any consideration of the numerous remaining assignments unnecessary.
Judgment reversed.